Henrietta Hooker
Henrietta Edgecomb Hooker (December 12, 1851 – May 13, 1929) was an American botanist and professor at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary (now Mount Holyoke College). She was the second female doctoral graduate in botany at Syracuse University,[1] which made her one of the first women to earn a Ph.D. in botany from any U.S. university.[2] Early life and educationHooker was born to Eliza Annie Hooker and George Washington Hooker in 1851, and was orphaned at the age of seven.[3] In 1867, at age sixteen, she began working at a New England cotton factory, but after a week of employment there, she sought help in finding a different job.[3] Hooker taught in Vermont public schools from 1869 to 1870, and at the Academy of West Charleston from 1870 to 1871.[4] Hooker entered Mount Holyoke Female Seminary in 1871 and graduated in 1873.[3] She did graduate work at MIT, and the universities of Syracuse, Berlin, and Chicago.[3] She earned a Ph.D. from Syracuse University in 1889 with a dissertation on the vine Cuscuta gronovii.[4][5] Hooker was among the first women to earn a Ph.D. in botany in the United States.[2] CareerAfter her graduation in 1873, Hooker joined Mount Holyoke as a faculty member, working alongside her former teacher Lydia Shattuck and zoologist Cornelia Clapp.[6] In 1899, she was one of two teachers with a Ph.D. at Mount Holyoke (the other being Clapp, the first woman in the United States to be awarded that degree in biology).[7][8] Hooker taught at Mount Holyoke for thirty-five years.[3] As the chair of the botany department, she advocated for expansion of the curriculum into newer branches of the field and for improvements to laboratory space and equipment.[3] Her research focused on the morphology and embryology of Cuscuta, a genus of parasitic plants.[4] Hooker's commitment to Mount Holyoke extended beyond her retirement in 1908. She bred prize-winning Buff Orpington chickens and donated the winnings to the school.[9][6] Mount Holyoke awarded her an honorary Sc.D in 1923,[3][10] and Hooker Auditorium is named in her honor.[11] Works
References
External links
|